A totally biased and unreasonable list of blogs that I think you might enjoy reading, which expands on the list in the sidebar of my own blog.

I reserve the right to add or remove any site from this blogroll at any time, for any reason or no reason at all, because it is my blogroll.

For an exhaustive list of Virginia political blogs, see BlogNetNews.

Des Moines Register Poll: Obama and Huckabee Lead

The Des Moines Register has just come out with its hotly anticipated final poll numbers before the Iowa caucuses on Thursday night.  Here are the results (November numbers in parentheses)

Democrats
Obama: 32% (28%)
Clinton: 25% (25%)
Edwards: 24% (23%)
Richardson: 6% (9%)
Biden: 4% (6%)
Dodd: 2% (1%)

Republicans
Huckabee: 32% (29%)
Romney: 26% (24%)
McCain: 13% (7%)
Thompson: 9% (5%)
Paul: 9% (7%)
Giuliani: 5% (13%)

Still too close to call, if you ask me, but...

*If Obama wins Iowa, we've got ourselves a real race heading into New Hampshire. If Obama were to win Iowa AND New Hampshire, I'd say he'd become the favorite for the nomination.  Currently, though, Obama (and Edwards) remain the underdogs to Hillary Clinton.  If she wins Iowa, it's going to be really tough for anyone else to overtake her.

*On the Republican side, if Huckabee beats Romney in Iowa, that could help McCain win New Hampshire.  Then, who knows, but I'd probably say McCain becomes the favorite for the Republican nomination.  Unfortunately for the Democrats, McCain's probably the strongest general election candidate on the GOP side.  That's why I'm rooting for Giuliani or Romney.

P.S.  The Des Moines Register adds, "An analysis of likely caucusgoers' second choices showed that the results would change little if the votes for the lower-rated candidates were redistributed among the front-runners."

{UPDATE: Ralph Nader endorses John Edwards, blasts Hillary Clinton.}

Ron Paul Blimp Greets 2008 in Charlottesville


Last Friday on his new blog, veteran political reporter Bob Gibson of the Charlottesville Daily Progress wrote about the Ron Paul "mini-blimp" that has found its portable home in Central Virginia:

The size of a small whale, Ron Paul’s Charlottesville blimp has been lighting the night skies along Rio Road and, as of today, Fontaine Avenue.

The white blimp—asking who the heck Ron Paul is—was trucked from its home base on East Rio Road late today to its new home in the sky near the Interstate 64 intersection with U.S. 29 just south of Fontaine Avenue.

The lighted blimp adds a new dimension to the surging Paul effort and appears not to be floated on hot air, but that other Washington staple—a shot of noble gas.

The GOP’s Paul, a Texas congressman and libertarian, is the first of 12 presidential candidates on the Feb. 12 Virginia primary ballots, six in each party, to get his blimp floating over the outskirts of the liberal enclave of Charlottesville.

That blimp is no longer on the outskirts. In a brilliant marketing move, the blimp's mover and shaker, Jack Faw, placed it right in the heart of Charlottesville for New Year's Eve. The blimp is parked near the corner of Main Street and McIntyre-Ridge Road. Lit up, it can be seen for quite a distance from all directions.

Faw, a retired goat farmer, and his blimp have already been the subject of feature stories on two local TV stations. In fact, the Christmas Eve story by Matt Holmes on WCAV-TV's web site is the number-one most accessed story among the station's recent archives. Holmes wrote:
Faw says Central Virginia's going to see a lot of that blimp.

"Staunton has already asked. Harrisonburg has asked. Lynchburg's interested. Richmond is interested. I-64 in Fluvanna County, some of our members down that way would like to have it."

The 72-year-old Paul has raised $19 million so far this quarter and he won the Virginia Straw Poll earlier this month. Still, the Texas congressman lags significantly in the national polls.
Annie Scholz of Channel 29 filed a story on the Ron Paul blimp on Christmas Day. She reported:
Faw special ordered the big balloon online and says it was worth it to take the campaign to new heights.

"I found a dealer and a manufacturer in California and with a lot of phone calls over a couple days is all. By the second day I had ordered it and paid for it," shared Faw.

Faw plans to take the balloon to different locations across Albemarle County. He says he'll put anywhere anyone will let him.

Faw won't tell us how much he spent on the balloon or the rest of his Ron Paul paraphernalia. He'll only say it's the price he's willing to pay for freedom.


With thousands of people streaming into Charlottesville tonight for First Night Virginia, to see the fireworks, or to dance the night away at Club 216, the Ron Paul blimp will be seen by many people heretofore unfamiliar with the presidential candidate from Texas. No doubt the question, "Who is Ron Paul?," will be on many lips this evening.

Talk about being lit up for New Year's Eve!

Update: I just received an email with a link to this story from Central Florida, where the official Ron Paul blimp -- not official in the sense of being connected to the campaign, but official in the sense that it's the original, full-size blimp that has spawned (through inspiration) the mini-blimps around the country, including Jack Faw's -- is slated to fly over the Capital One Bowl (a football game):

The Capitol One Bowl Tuesday was set to pit Florida against Michigan.

Besides their teams in the big game, the two states have one other thing in common: both are holding presidential primaries in January.

At least one candidate has taken advantage of having all those voters in one place.

The Ron Paul campaign planned to put a blimp up over the Citrus Bowl Tuesday before the game, so more than 70,000 fans attending the Capital One Bowl would be able to see it pass by the arena.

Presumably, a blimp flying over the stadium will also end up on TV screens across the country, and seen by far more than the 70,000 people in the stands. And CFNews13 was first with the story.

Top Ten Things You Didn’t Know About 2007

I guarantee you were not aware of these developments that occurred in the outgoing year. That's OK: I live to inform.
  1. The current gel-intensive men's hairstyle known as the "fauxhawk" was named for the Fauxhawk Indians of western Kentucky. They never wore their hair like that, though. They had far too much self-respect.

  2. The year saw the invention of the Best Palindrome Evaaah: "A man, a plan, a canal, a small gravy-boat, Hugo Chavez!"

  3. In a new biography, it was revealed this year that Franklin D. Roosevelt kept ferrets, which he used in bizarre Oval Office ceremonies to cast necromantic spells on small bits of ginger, the Montgomery Ward catalog, a tomato, Field Marshal Montgomery, other ferrets, Montgomery, Alabama, and Eleanor. This is how he got polio.

  4. It was discovered that boars actually have tits, and that they find them quite useful in lawn care, car maintenance and home repair. Also sex.

  5. Immanuel Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics doesn't actually exist. You can look it up.

  6. A Dremel rotary tool can be put to many other uses: surgery, break-dancing, prayer, numerology, divination, and the summoning of eldritch spirits from the Lost City of R'lyeh. The list is literally endless. What fun! (Summoning attachment extra.)

  7. In a rare display of honesty, Indian gods revealed that they don't actually have all those extra arms. They use their powers of deception to cloud your mind into thinking they have them, and then steal your kidneys while you ponder, "Howcome all them arms?"

  8. That last Sopranos episode? With the weird blackout? It was broadcast only to your house, in an (apparently quite successful) attempt to vex you. And only you. The rest of us saw Tony and family walk out of the restaurant, get in their car, and drive around aimlessly, asking each other, "Whaddya wanna do?" "I dunno, what do you wanna do?" It was monumentally dull. Oh -- and Meadow took off her top.

  9. It was discovered that, contrary to popular belief, ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny only in leap years.

  10. There is, among the Khosa-speaking peoples of southwestern Africa, a legend that the world came into being when a snake and a badger conspired to fool a lion into thinking he was a different lion. The lion, hopelessly confused, ate the snake (but not the badger, for some weird reason) and fell into a slumber. In his dream, he was naked at a really important meeting of lions. The others laughed cruelly at his plight, and in his embarrassment, he spilled some goat-milk, which became the oceans, and some dirt he was carrying around for a rainy day, which became the Earth. An orange he dropped became the sun, and a calabash of honey the moon. Then he dropped a very large number of trillions of balls of flaming gas, in which hydrogen is built into helium at a temperature of millions of degrees; these became the stars and galaxies. Which just goes to show you the Power of Myth.

Newly Discovered: St. Paul’s Epistle to the Cowherds

1:1 Dear Cowherds;

1:2 It hath come unto the Lord's attention that the Red of Skin of the Capital City have smitten a mighty blow unto the Herders of Beeves and Kine of the village of Dallas.

1:3 Lo, the number of their victory was twenty-seven to six, and the Herders of Kine smelléd not the Promised Land, yea even unto first and ten upon the enemy eighteen.

1:4 And the number of their rushing was one cubit.

1:5 ONE CUBIT.

1:6 And the number of the rushing of one man alone among the Red of Skin was one hundred and four cubits. In the fullness of time, the Herders of Kine let not this wondrous thing to happen, for their rush defense hath been mighty.

1:7 Woe unto the King of the Herders of Beeves and Kine, for he hath left his seed and strength in the dewy parts of harlots. Woe unto the offensive line of the Herders, who protecteth the King from harm, for they could not. Woe unto the defensive secondary of the Herders, who were beaten like unto a gong, and hide among the women and concubines.

1:8 Give me not the foolish prattle of children, who bleat saying "the mightiest warriors came not that day, for they were girding their loins for later battle." Upon my mighty pole may ye smoke. The King of the Herders came, and he suckled upon the teat of dead bears. No man hitteth Owens when seated upon his ass.

1:9 And yet thou believest not.

1:10 O unbeliever, thou hast not suffered this long season with the Red of Skin. Thou knowest not the agony when one witnesseth of a wise man foolishly calling two time-outs one upon the other, incurring the wrath of the Priests and Scribes, who delivered up the Red of Skin unto their enemies for slaughter. Thou knowest not the bitterness of the man who witnesseth the putting of the ball upon the ground, yea unto four times in sixteen plays; thus do the wicked prevail. Thou hast not seen with thine own eyes the progression of the clock when the wise man would fain have stopped it; and the calling of foolish plays; and the loss of vast lands upon the occasion of Third and Long.

1:11 These tribulations would make even unto a saint drink mightily from the cup of bitterness.

1:12 Yet unto this time of desperation, they surge. They proffer hope like unto bread upon a starving man.

1:13 They beat Dallas.

1:14 ONE CUBIT of rushing offense gave they them. ONE CUBIT.

1:15 Like unto a wet rag beat they them. Like unto a broken donkey. Like unto a step-child of red tresses. Like unto a child of great girth who stealeth lunches.

1:16 Give us this day Seattle.

1:17 Love, Paul

Later edit: I've discovered that one yard = two cubits, so amend accordingly. TWO CUBITS did they give them on the ground....

2007 Virginian of the Year

Although many candidates were considered by each of the editiorial board members of The Virgininan Federalist, I am humbled to recognize Liviu Librescu as Virginian of the Year for 2007. His death on April 16, 2007 at Virginia Tech was a characteristically heroic moment in a life of extraordinary accomplishment. Holding shut the door of his solid mechanics classroom in Norris Hall at Virginia Tech, Librescu prevented Cho Seung Hui from entering the classroom until most of his students had escaped, while shouting to them to hurry their escape. Librescu's early life in Romania included...

[Read More]

BVBL’s Top Ten Stories Of 2007

2007 was a quite a year on BVBL, with stories of scandals, lawsuit threats, historic legislative efforts to combat the illegal alien problem, the Rack n’ Roll scandal in Manassas Park, and more. Here are the stories that readers found most interesting this year, based on the number of times that readers requested a post. (more…)

Our Would-be Presidents





















And may be the best man/gal win in the Iowa caucuses...

Happy New Year From The Podium

2007 has been an interesting year, to say the least. 2008 is already promising to be historic in some way, shape, or form.

For all of the readers I've gained over the past year, I'm eternally grateful for your readership. I hope you all have a great 2008!

Catch ya next year.

Headlights (and tail lights)


Driving to NoVA yesterday in the sometimes pouring rain, I was struck by how many cars did not have their headlights on. I understood it was the law that headlights were required (even though I’ve had no luck in tracking down the legislation). Note this information from the DMV (emphasis mine):

Virginia law requires motorists to use headlights during inclement weather such as rain, fog, snow or sleet when visibility is reduced to 500 feet. You must use your headlights whenever you use your windshield wipers as a result of bad weather.

So what’s up with all those cars in front of me with no tail lights on?After a while, it dawned on me: they were using daytime running lights! With daytime running lights on, the tail lights are not lit.

So, it begs the question: are daytime running lights the same as headlights? If they are, then the legislation requiring headlights needs to be amended to include tail lights. After all, when driving down 95 in the rain, it’s not the cars coming towards me that are the problem; instead, it’s the ones in front of me, who I can barely see due to the spray from the tires. (And why does it seem everybody is buying grey or silver cars these days?)

Ron Paul “Revolution” in Harrisonburg?

.

Recently I have been seeing numerous Ron Paul 2008 signs around Harrisonburg and have found several 20 “Somethings” at work talking about his campaign and issues. It has been interesting talking issues with people who were 14 years old when 9/11 happened and to hear their perspective on this and the war on terrorism.

The interesting thing is that a civil debate and conversation can happen with these Ron Paul’s supporters resulting in a productive exchange of ideas and opinions. Unlike many discussions with “Progressives” of the same age that fall back on “Bush lied us into the war” and refuse to discuss issues or facts that they do not agree with. These same “Progressives” are now arguing at work that Iran should be allowed a nuclear bomb because if we have them everybody should be allowed to posses a nuke. Ask them about Iran’s top guy calling for the destruction of Israel and America and they say everybody is allowed to their own opinion…

I have found it refreshing to discuss issues with people who are voting for the first time and interested in the actual issues instead of rallying around the most recent “MTV Voter Drive” agenda. While not agreeing with many of Ron Paul’s stances on the issues, I find it interesting to talk with potential new voters hungry for information about an election that will surely shape their future.

I have also found it interesting to discuss issues with people who are voting for the first time and interested in the actual issues instead of rallying around the most recent “MTV Voter Drive” agenda. While not agreeing with many of Ron Paul’s stances on the issues, I find it interesting to talk with potential new voters hungry for information about an election that will surely shape their future.




Members of the Ron Paul “Revolution” have been criticized for their appearance at functions and maybe being a little loud at times but it is good to see them interested in conservative issues. I personally do not believe that Ron Paul is the best Republican candidate but I do welcome the interest in conservative issues that he has generated in many younger voters.

Let’s just clear the air

I have received many phone calls over the last few days concerning the situation at the courthouse at the end of last week.  I can only speak for myself, and my opinion, and what has been told to me by others over the last several months.

It is my opinion that Dianne would have likely been fired by Chaz, Brenda, and Mike had they won because of the potential threat to them in 8 years. I feel as though this may have been a part of the reason Dianne decided to run because she knew she was going to win it, or be out of a job.

I think everyone is aware of my feelings on the way Wayne Harper has managed that office.  I have never in my life heard of an employer talking about an employee the way he was reported to have talked about Dianne, without refering to her as an ex-employee.  

Apparently, over the years Wayne has forgotten what it is like to need a job to feed your family.  To know the Fulks personally like Wayne has over the years, and intentionally put them in a situation of employment uncertainty, is less than human.  I know it is policy in a job like Dianne’s to make sure no documents are compromised or anything tampered with when someone is relieved of their duties and that is why she was let go in the manner in which she was.  However, it is my opinion that it was done in the most humiliating way possible so certain co-workers could enjoy her departure.

I know there are some people who do not understand why Dianne was suprised by the firing when she, according to her own quotes, knew it was coming since April.  This is a problem that lies with Dianne.  There is a difference between saying you are going to do something and actually doing it, and I don’t think she thought Wayne would actually go through with it.  From what I know of Dianne, she tends to believe that people will treat her the way she treats them.

The future.

I hope Chaz is careful who he hires.  I have heard that he may hire one of his campaign workers to be a deputy clerk, possibly as Dianne’s replacement.  It would be wise to check with former employers to make sure she doesn’t have a problem with keeping questionable books…….    

 

      

 

 

 

Fred Address Iowa Voters

Check this out, courtesy of Shaun Kenney, and tell me Fred Thompson does not come across very "presidential" in his appearance, and strong in his statements.

To use some acting terminology, which is applicable given Fred's past as an actor, it's almost like watching a dress rehearsal for a future "address to the nation". Just trade the background for the Oval Office. ;)

Go Fred!

Does McCain Have The Temperment To Lead?

I’m just going to link to Laura W; you decide.

Photosynthesis at Richmond Sunlight


Waldo has put together a personalized bill tracking system for Richmond Sunlight called Photosynthesis. I just went over and put in all of the bills I mentioned in my legislative agenda series. You can see my list here.

Way cool, Waldo. Way cool ;)

Oh - and you can follow your bills in your favorite RSS reader, too.

Trouble in Farrisland

Is the defense of homeschooling still the priority for HSLDA, or are there other things that are priority? And really, what are membership dues being used for?

That’s a question we’ve been asking about this dubious organization founded by Mike Farris for quite some time. What, for instance, does homeschooling have to do with prohibiting the legal recognition of GLBT families, or with maintaining hilariously archaic “crimes against nature” statutes?

The above quote happens to be from Ned Ryun, until quite recently the director of the HSLDA Federal Political Action Committee. His resignation was apparently occasioned by the executive decision by Farris to endorse Mike Huckabee, although the simmering student and faculty dissent at Patrick Henry College doesn’t seem to have helped.

Mr. Ryun also points us to a blog by Spunky Homeschool, which exposes Huckabee’s record of less than stellar support for the legal rights of homeschoolers - a record that is documented and criticized on the HSLDA website.

This line ought to be self-explanatory: After acknowledging Huckabee’s “correct” anti-gay and anti-reproductive freedom views, Spunky asks “But what about another issue that is very important to homeschoolers–education?” In an extensive and well-documented analysis, she even details Huckabee’s alliance with then-Virginia Governor (gasp!) Mark Warner in a task force intended to bring education in the U.S. closer to “a European style education model,” an idea that is supposedly anathema to the Christian Dominionist set.

Why, then, the enthusiastic endorsement (made without even consulting Ryun, the PAC director at the time), Farris’ high profile presence on the campaign trail, the buzz in the media about the role of grassroots homeschool activists in Huckabee’s rapid rise?

Let’s be honest: Mike Farris and his merry band of Dominionists do not advocate homeschooling because homeschooling provides a superior education (which it can, under the right circumstances). They advocate homeschooling because they fundamentally and forcefully disagree with this statement:

Children are owed as a matter of justice the capacity to choose to lead lives–adopt values and beliefs, pursue an occupation, endorse new traditions–that are different from those of their parents. — Rob Reich, Stanford University

They do not associate with, nor support, homeschooling families who do not share their very particular fundamentalist theology, and in fact the machinations of Farris and HSLDA caused a split in what was once a vibrant and politically diverse homeschool movement, a split from which it is still recovering.

The real reason that Mike Farris endorses Mike Huckabee, which has nothing to do with homeschooling, per se: Huckabee is virulently anti-gay, obviously; and he is an adherent of the Southern Baptist dogma that women are to be submissive and obedient to men. Here is the real story of the rapist released by then-Arkansas Governor Huckabee, a violent and anti-social man with a lengthy criminal record, who went on to rape and murder at least two other women after his release. According to an update to the original story, Huckabee received letters from numerous other women who had been assaulted by this man. He ignored them - and then tried to obtain all existing copies of the letters to cover up what he had done. Huckabee, far from being the principled Christian conservative now being portrayed, was just a water-carrier for a vindictive “Christian Right” tabloid campaign to discredit one of the rape victims, all because of the hatred his good friend, Baptist radio host Jay Cole, felt for Bill Clinton. According to a Huckabee supporter who claims to have been there at the time, “we had this preacher named Jay Cole who went all over the state telling about how an innocent man was locked up and the corrupt Democrats had framed and abused an innocent man.” Some “culture of life.” Women’s lives don’t count.

All of the evidence points to this conclusion: Mike Farris doesn’t ultimately care about the rights of homeschool families in general, the quality of education these children receive, or even the capacity of the “culture warriors” he boasts of producing to be effective in the world of government, let alone the global economy. Those things are just window dressing. The HSLDA was intended to be a voting bloc, end of story. The homeschool parents who basically agree with his stance on social issues such as marriage equality are merely tools whose voting and lobbying behavior is to be directed from Mike Farris’ office, and the objective has less to do with education than with Ned Ryun’s euphemistic “other things.”

I assume that Ryun’s question about membership dues was rhetorical; surely he knows this:

[M]ost homeschoolers, even HSLDA members, aren’t aware that their membership dues pay for Michael Farris’ membership on the Council for National Policy. Look that one up.

Podium Positions: Immigration

The immigration debate is one of rising importance in America. While most people are against a solution such as amnesty, the debate rages on about how we go about fixing the problems with immigration, putting an end to illegal immigration, and what would be a pragmatic solution to this problem.

Illegal Immigrants
Most estimates say we have 12-20 million illegal immigrants currently residing in the United States. Other estimates go as low as 7 million, others as high as 34 million. This is a lot of people, nonetheless. The reasons as to why people illegally immigrate to this country are fairly obvious. We are a great nation of promise and opportunity. However, we must keep in mind that illegal immigration is exactly that...illegal. It is a violation of American laws.

The focus, naturally, is on the border between the United States and Mexico. While the pro-amnesty/pro-legalization left claims that this focus is inherently racist in nature, it should be worth pointing out that, according to a 2005 report by the Pew Hispanic Center, a combined 81% of all illegal immigrants come from either Mexico, Central America, or South America. 9% come from Asia, 6% from Europe, and 4% from everywhere else.

For the 81% coming from points south of the United States, I believe that we must look at stronger border security. This includes an effective fence and increased border patrol. For the 9% coming from Asia, many of which are Chinese laborers smuggled via ports into this country, we need better port security. We don't just border Canada and Mexico, you know, we also border the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans...as well as the Gulf of Mexico.

Not only that, but stronger border security prevents drug smuggling, as well as human smuggling and weapons trafficking. This is one area we should get a lot of assistance from the Mexican government, as Mexican President Felipe Calderon has been very tough on the drug cartels during his first year in office.

We must also punish the corporations that knowingly entice and employ illegal immigrants for the sake of exploiting cheap labor.

As For Illegals in America...
Now, the solutions above seem to be targeted at stopping the flow of illegal immigration into America...but what about the illegals here. What do we do with them?

Amnesty is not an option, and neither is attempting to round up every illegal immigrant and throw them out.

Now, illegal aliens who are convicted of another crime should be deported. They are already here illegally, committing another crime should be a ticket back to wherever they come from. However, the majority of the illegal immigrant population aren't breaking any other laws (as they really can't afford to, since they would be deported). How do we further reduce the population of illegals?

So we give them no reason to stay. There are 3 ways to do this.

- Dissolve the loopholes that allow them to receive entitlements such as welfare and Medicare (which many of them receive through false Social Security numbers and identities).
- Crack down on the corporations that hire illegals and landlords who house them.
- Create a penalty for "sanctuary cities", this penalty will be removed from the federal funding the city receives...and the longer the city keeps it's "sanctuary" status, the greater the penalties become.

This will undoubtedly create a reverse flow of these illegal aliens. In fact, this reverse flow is already starting to happen in the wake of increased enforcement (and the favorability of increased enforcement) of immigration laws.

Filling the Economic Hole, Visa Overstayers, and an Opportunity for Illegals
Of course, because the issue of illegal immigration has gone on relatively untouched in the way that it has gone, illegal immigrants hold a very sizable percentage of lower-income, manual labor jobs. To eliminate these workers would cause a problem for many corporations as they would attempt to fill these jobs, probably with limited success.

However, given that the unemployment rate in our country is very low, and those that remain unemployed are generally undesirable for one reason or another, the need for these laborers is high. So we make it clear and simple.

The number of visas, temporary and permanent, that are given out to foreigners needs to be increased fairly dramatically...plain and simple. The process for those looking to immigrate to this country legally needs to be made more accessible and easier for potential immigrants to manuver through.

Illegal immigrants who do not have a serious criminal history in America would be welcomed back, but they would have to get in line with everyone else...however, with a freer and faster flow of immigrants into America in a legal form, this would allow formerly illegal immigrants to come back to America legally much faster than they could under the current system.

Those with a serious criminal history, as is currently the law, will not be welcomed back...at least, not so easily.

The process of renewing visas needs to be made simpler and easier, as well. This way, we eliminate a large percentage of visa overstayers, who normally overstay their visa due to the lengthy renewal process or because they were not aware of their status.

This would allow for a larger flow of migrant workers for corporations that rely on this form of labor as well as bolster confidence in the immigration process by making the process more efficient.

Overview
By giving illegal aliens no reason to stay in America, as well as giving them the promise of an easier path to legal immigration if they return to their nation of origin, we give many of those who are simply looking for a better life a chance to actually achieve that goal. They will be able to achieve this goal without having to break laws and go to great lengths to conceal their existence.

Thus, these potential immigrants can choose the legal, lawful path towards working and living in America. By doing so, we ease racial tensions quite a bit and these immigrants can better assimilate into our society as law-abiding citizens who contribute to a better America without having to break the law to get here in the first place.

Open Letter to the Iowa GOP – Choose Wisely, Choose Hunter

Guest Editorial Alexander J. Madison - December 31, 2007 Dear Iowegians, Every presidential election season, your state has the opportunity to help shape the election going forward. Unfortunately, too many times, you have selected a dud during the Iowa Caucuses. In 1976, you picked Gerald Ford, proponent of the ERA and abortion rights, over a very conservative Ronald Reagan. In 1980, you

How to Become a Millionaire

Work hard, don't spend, invest well.

Best analogy I've ever read: An Indian lying on a mat in Calcutta has more wealth than the average American. While an American may live better, he lives on credit, and all things considered lives most of his life paying off accumulated debt.

The man on the mat on the other hand can never have the mat taken away.

What the analogy proves is that material wealth is really a matter of accumulating capital, not in having "things" that are really leased from the true owner over a period of years. Best lesson I've learned in awhile.

Happy New Year

A year ago, I rang in the new year with some of my closest friends by unloading a few guns into the sky of Karachi.  This new year’s eve - which I had hoped to also spend with some of my closest friends - will instead be a quiet one at home in Arlington, as I nurse an unpleasant cold. Not the closing bookend I’ve have chosen, but on the whole, it’s been a good year.

Here’s to the same for you and yours in 2008.

End of Year Political Ramblings

We’re only just a few hours away from ending 2007. With that, here are a few political ramblings of mine.
2007 Elections
The RPV continued to bleed. We lost the Virginia Senate by a couple seats. Luckily the margin isn’t any wider and we still retain the House of Delegates to keep ole Tim Kaine and the Dems in check. I think that with any luck we’ll take back the Senate of Virginia in 2011 or before.

2008 Elections
This is going to be an exciting one. This election cycle is the first time since 1928 that an incumbent President or Vice-President has not been on the ballot for President. When it boils down to it, I’d like to see better candidates all around on both sides. But, we have to go with what is there. We must work hard to ensure that Virginia remains a “red state” and doesn’t reverse the 40 some year trend of voting Republican in Presidential races. The Dems and Liberals are salivating over the chance to turn Virginia “blue” and hold us up the rest of the nation as an example of their gains and ideology. We cannot allow this to happen and must fight like hell to keep it from materializing. My prediction is that either Mike Huckabee or Fred Thomspon will be the GOP nominee. It will be between Hillary Clinton and Barrack Obama on the Dem side.

In Virginia for U.S. Senate, we must unite behind Jim Gilmore now and go hard after Mark Warner. Jim Gilmore, although he has problems with some, is going to be our candidate and we must help him as much as we can to ensure that we don’t see Mark Warner joining Jim Webb as our next U.S. Senator. Jim Gilmore shouldn’t be underestimated and I think he possesses the political skill to shine the light on Mark Warner and expose his true record. Mark Warner is taking this race too for grated. Hopefully that will be Warner’s downfall.

2009 Elections
In 2009, I am pretty confident if the RPV gets its act straight we are in a stellar position to retake the governorship, and maybe sweep the Lt. Gov. and AG posts too just like in 1997. On the GOP side, Bob McDonnell appears to have a slight lead over Bill Bolling on the nomination. I like both of them very much. We just need to make sure that a repeat of Earley vs. Hager like in 2001 doesn’t happen here.

So, those are my general ramblings about politics for this year, next year, and beyond.